comicbooks.com Join Free
HomeCrime and Justice#3Read

★ comicbooks.com Reading Room

Crime and Justice #3 (1951)

Charlton · 1951 · 36 pages

Free to read · restored edition by comicbooks.com · Issue details →

Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 1 of 36
1 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 2 of 36
2 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 3 of 36
3 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 4 of 36
4 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 5 of 36
5 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 6 of 36
6 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 7 of 36
7 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 8 of 36
8 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 9 of 36
9 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 10 of 36
10 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 11 of 36
11 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 12 of 36
12 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 13 of 36
13 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 14 of 36
14 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 15 of 36
15 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 16 of 36
16 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 17 of 36
17 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 18 of 36
18 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 19 of 36
19 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 20 of 36
20 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 21 of 36
21 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 22 of 36
22 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 23 of 36
23 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 24 of 36
24 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 25 of 36
25 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 26 of 36
26 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 27 of 36
27 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 28 of 36
28 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 29 of 36
29 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 30 of 36
30 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 31 of 36
31 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 32 of 36
32 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 33 of 36
33 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 34 of 36
34 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 35 of 36
35 / 36
Crime and Justice #3 (1951) — page 36 of 36
36 / 36
ContinueCrime and Justice #4 →
Contains 6 stories
Communications
1 pp · non-fiction; crime · pencils Frank Bell · inks Frank Bell

This non-fiction story examines the tools and techniques law enforcement uses to solve crimes, from radio communications that broadcast wanted alarms to patrol cars, to fingerprint photography and advanced detection equipment like the fluoroscope. Illustrated by Frank Bell, "Communications" walks readers through how modern police science—including moulage reproductions of evidence and forensic imaging—has transformed crime investigation into a rigorous, evidence-based practice.

Underworld War Killer against Killer
7 pp · crime
Tell Tale Double Slug
6 pp · crime · pencils Walter Davoren · inks Walter Davoren

A boy named Johnny gets caught in the crossfire when two neighborhood gangs clash, but the real trouble begins when adult gangsters intrude on the fight—and a homemade gun in the hands of a kid gang member becomes the centerpiece of a chain reaction that involves the police, a reluctant doctor, and a desperate scramble for the truth. Walter Davoren's pencils and inks capture the raw desperation as the consequences of that single shot spiral far beyond what anyone intended, teaching a hard lesson about how quickly a moment of anger can destroy a life.

The Man Who Was Worth His Weight in Gold
5 pp · crime

When a dockworker named Hook Lally stumbles onto a fortune in gold hidden on a shipping pier, his discovery of Art Lansky's smuggling racket sets off a violent chain reaction of betrayal and bloodshed. Caught between a ruthless criminal operation and his own gold-fueled ambitions, Lally must navigate a treacherous game where one misstep could be his last. This 1951 crime tale explores how the promise of sudden wealth can corrupt an honest man's judgment in the blink of an eye.

Nightmare of Death
5 pp · crime

A man boards a train haunted by violent thoughts of a woman from his past, his mind spiraling into a horrifying fantasy where he acts on his darkest impulses—only to wake and discover the nightmare may not be what it seemed. "Nightmare of Death" explores the terrifying power of a disturbed mind as it races between reality and delusion, leaving a man shaken and uncertain about what he's truly capable of.

Art and Swindlers
7 pp · crime

Len Rawson, hard-boiled F.B.I. agent, tackles an art theft case on New York's elite Fifty-Seventh Street—only to uncover a sprawling insurance swindle far more dangerous than a simple stolen painting. When a forger connected to the scheme is found dead outside the gallery and Rawson closes in on the mastermind behind it, art and violence collide in a thrilling takedown. This 1951 case proves that even when you don't know a Rembrandt from a comic strip, a good agent always gets results.

Restored edition © comicbooks.com. Our digitization, remastering, and presentation are our own work.

See something wrong with this issue? Report it.